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H olidays in Slovenia

H olidays in Slovenia. Pina Špegel. There are two kinds of holidays in Slovenia - national holidays and work-free days. National holidays are those celebrated by the state - this includes official functions and flying of the national flag.

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H olidays in Slovenia

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  1. Holidays in Slovenia Pina Špegel

  2. There are two kinds of holidays in Slovenia - national holidays and work-free days. • National holidays are those celebrated by the state - this includes official functions and flying of the national flag. • The latter are actually Catholic religious holidays (Christmas, Easter and Assumption), which are equivalent to any Sunday - companies and schools stay closed, but there is no official celebration.

  3. Public holidays in Slovenia • 1 and 2 January - New Year (novo leto) • 8 February - Prešeren Day, the Slovenian cultural holiday – (Prešernov dan, slovenski kulturni praznik) - anniversary of the death of Slovenian poet France Prešeren, established as the national cultural day in 1944 (work-free day from 1991) • Easter - Sunday and Monday (velika noč in velikonočni ponedeljek) work-free day, date varies • 27 April - Day of Uprising Against Occupation (dan upora proti okupatorju) Formerly Liberation Front Day (dan Osvobodilne fronte), marks the establishment, in 1941, of the Liberation Front to fight the German, Italian and Hungarian occupation of Slovenia • 1 and 2 May - Labour Day (praznik dela) • Pentecostal Sunday (binkoštna nedelja) work-free day, date varies • 25 June - Statehood Day (dan državnosti) Commemorates the proclamation of independence in 1991 • 15 August - Assumption Day (Marijino vnebovzetje - veliki šmaren)work-free day • 17 August - Slovenians in Prekmurje Incorporated into the Mother Nation Day (dan združitve prekmurskih Slovencev z matičnim narodom po prvi svetovni vojni) not a work-free day • 15 September - Restoration of Primorska to the Motherland Day (dan vrnitve Primorske k matični domovini) not a work-free day • 31 OctoberReformation Day (dan reformacije) work-free day • 1 NovemberRemembrance Day (dan spomina na mrtve) Formerly called The Day of the Dead (dan mrtvih) • 23 NovemberRudolf Maister Day (dan Rudolfa Maistra) not a work-free day • 25 DecemberChristmas (božič) work-free day • 26 DecemberIndependence and Unity Day (dan neodvisnosti in enotnosti) Commemorates the proclamation of the independence plebiscite results in 1990a

  4. In addition to these, several other holidays are traditionally and popularly celebrated by the people of Slovenia. The most well known are: • Mardi Gras (pust) date varies • St. George's Day (jurjevanje) the welcoming of spring; 23 April • St. Martin's day (martinovanje) changing of must into wine; 11 November • Saint Nicholas Day (miklavž) when children get presents; 6 December • The former Yugoslav Day of the Youth - Dan mladosti on 25 May is also celebrated by some young people

  5. Prešeren’s day - February 8th • The central Slovenian Cultural Holiday has been solemnized since 1945. It was announced for the cultural holiday of Slovenian nation on February 1st, 1945, since 1991 it has been also a working free day. • Beside the central solemnity in Ljubljana, there are also numerous other solemnities and cultural manifestations taking place elsewhere; many cultural institutions have the so called Day of Open Doors. • During the past years, there have been literary appearances of our poets and writers at the Prešeren's Monument, some Slovenian publishing houses organise literary meetings and present the novelties in the field of literature and science.

  6. Valentine’s day -February 14th • At the end of the eighties and in the nineties of 20th, from North America and Western Europe, celebration of Valentine's Day, holiday of all being in love, spread also to our country. • Formerly, this was a holiday of young people, fiances who exchanged their presents on this day. Mostly, these were sweets. • The Valentine's Day also has its holiday colour, which is red and a symbol, which is a heart. • In some places, e.g. in Bela Krajina St. Valentine was worshipped also as protector of cattle. In Prlekija, housewives baked special flat cakes in the form of small birds and put them among boughs of bushes and trees.

  7. Easter • Christmas and Easter belong to the biggest Christian feasts. For both of them, we can speak of the customs and habits of a ceratin period and not only of solemnity of a certain day. • The solemnity is connected with Palm Sunday processions and blessing of buckets of young greenery, tight up and knitted into bundles. These have different names in Slovenia (beganica, boganica, presnec, prajtelj, potica, pegelj etc.) which indicates the hypothesis that these bundles had formerly been a kind of pastry, decorated by young greeneries and plants. • The richness of forms, sizes and technological solutions of Slovenian bundles is extraordinry. The youngest ones are the Ljubljana bundles which are composed of varicoloured plane parts and some evergreen plants. In the thirties of the 20th Century, they were manufactured by inhabitants from the edge of the city for the citizens of Ljubljana and they offered them on the market. • Some examples of decoration of bundles are known already from the years of the first World War, but the real bloom of this home craft was in the mentioned years. Today, the Ljubljana bundles are a rarity in the palette of this creative richness in Slovenia.

  8. Labour's Day - May 1st • The International Workers' Day was first celebrated on May 1st 1890 for the victims of demonstrations in Chicago where workers were fighting for eight hour's working day. • The first solemnities of this working class feast were also on the Slovenian ethnical territory already in 1890 in Ljubljana, Trst/Trieste, Celovec/Klagenfurt and Maribor. It was announced as a state holiday on April 22nd 1945. In 1949, it became a two days' holiday, in 1973 its name was changed into Labour's Day and as such it has remained until now. • After the Second World War until the middle of the fifties, huge military parades were characteristic for celebration the 1st May. These parades had also its civil part with presentation of different economic and other achievements, being shown in processions or on trucks. This model of celebrating was brought to Slovenia from the former Soviet Union and attracted masses of spectators every year. • With the time, also celebrating the 1st May began to step away from its pomposity and meeting eagerness. The holiday became more and more connected with excursions and various entertaining sports' events.

  9. Martin's Day - November 11th • In the modern world St. Martin's or Martinmas is a feast which is mostly connected with new wine. In the days around St. Martin's the must is changed into wine. In some places, there is a habit that must or wine is blessed on this day which is something completely different from the christening which means acceptance of the new born to the community of the Christians and nothing else. • The customs and habits on St. Martin's show that this feast has a lot of older roots that the Christian ones. Martinmas is also called autumn carnival. • Among the dishes is popular St. Martin's goose which is probably the rest of some ancient cult animal. But the goose in our customs and habits is not only a delicious dish on St. Martin's day. In the past, they used to predict the weather by it or its chest bone. In Goriška Brda there was a habit that houswives made a »Martinec« on the evening before St. Martin's. They sticked small branches of laurel, juniper, basinthe, lavender and rosemary into a bigger apple. If the apple dried nicely they thought the harvest would be good the following year. If the apple was rotten, this was a bad sign for the following vintage.

  10. Reformation Day - Oktober 31st • Reformation Day has been a holiday and working free day since 1991. It is dedicated to the memory of religious renewal movement in the 16th century which lead to the formation of protestantism and to the division in the western Christianity. • For Slovenes, this movement has an extraordinary meaning as this means the time of the first Slovenian book (1550) and endeavours for the development of the literary language. Beside the Catechism by Primož Trubar (1550) and the Dalmatin's Bible (1584), the protestant writers contributed numerous works to our lingual and wider cultural treasury, all being of religious contents. • Of course, the Protestant Movement in Slovenia had also other dimmensions in the field of social, above all religious and church life. Reformators abolished several feasts, they abandoned pilgrimage, and changes were also in the relationship towards the folk poem and other areas of spiritual life.

  11. Christmas - December 25th • The customs of the Christmas time have a variegated picture and a whole palette of forms. A detailed analysis of individual acts and also forms has shown that many of them go back to the period before Christ, to the pagan ancient time and associate with the ancient cult of the departed. • This is also the case with the Christmas bread, baking of which belongs to the oldest signs of this feast. • In many places, they used to bake three different loafs of bread, in some places even four. Very often, these loafs were festively decorated by paper and flower decorations and above all by decorations made of paste. • The »Kopač« on the table was decorated by pictures and crib and on the edges of the table were put: blasting powder, blessed water, blessed wood of Palm Sunday bundle and a small bowl filled with different cereals. • In other Slovenian places there was a habit to put also tools and devices for working in the field together with the bread under the table. • Everything that was on the table and under it, was not a rest of some prechristian sacrificial cults. It was meant for the departed, it means the rest of belief in the cult of predecessors which was very much present in our family environments in the nights of the winter bonfires.

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